The Power Trip

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The Power Trip

2022/ 2023
Foreword 7 written by Julie Mentor Introduction 11 written by Rumbi Goredema Görgens A decade of leveraging relationships of influence in the interests of mothers 14 Carol-Ann Foulis Not just somebody’s mother 17 Qaanita Rossier, written by Samantha Herbst Finding myself in motherhood 22 Palesa Mphambani, written by Samantha Herbst Fostering a safe space for mothers 27 Pamela Madonsela, written by Samantha Herbst A mentor for moms 32 Nqubeko Shezi, written by Samantha Herbst Nurturing hope for a nation 38 Nobuntu Hlazo-Webster An adaptive approach to parenting 41 Nomgcobo Galela, written by Samantha Herbst Teen mom turned antenatal educator 47 Noloyiso Williams, written by Samantha Herbst The community’s coach 53 Nodumo Makaza, written by Samantha Herbst Contents
The village Gogo 59 Mildred Hlatshwayo, written by Samantha Herbst A reflection on how we can protect mothers’ dignity and autonomy in our social protection systems 64 Wanga Zembe-Mkabile Small-town girl, big ambitions 67 Mahlatse Kgatle, written by Samantha Herbst Mother on the move 72 Lyndall Moodley, written by Samantha Herbst Striving for mother-centered care 79 Jolene Hollenbach, written by Samantha Herbst Informal networks as catalysts for social connectedness 85 Kentse Radebe Growing through what you go through 88 Chimonay Masumbe, written by Samantha Herbst More than one way to mother 93 Bronte Davies, written by Samantha Herbst Mamandla Alumni Updates 99 Remembering Gillian 116 written by Julie Mentor Mapping the Mamandla Network 118 Apply for the Mamandla Fellowship 123

mothers must mother each other, too. we must hold each other up & surround each other strong & in the ear of every new mother we must whisper, you belong, you belong.

Vicki Rivard from Brave New Mother

Welcome to The Power Trip

It brings me great joy to share this first Mamandla publication with you.

Our team has had the privilege to bear witness to three cohorts of exceptional women who embarked on the Mamandla journey, and we knew we needed a platform to share and amplify their collective brilliance.

The Mamandla Fellowship was founded in 2019. The vision percolated with the team for some time before we launched as we strategised the best way to translate what makes a traditional fellowship model so powerful with what will also serve the needs of a group of busy mothers.

We are calling our first edition of this publication, The Power Trip. This is the name of the first immersion each cohort gathers at. It is time away from the fellows’ homes - for many it involves a trip by plane across the country, and it symbolises the elevation of the individual fellow, the collective, and the position of motherhood in South Africa to one of great power and influence.

Motherhood and power have a complex and nuanced relationship in the context of South Africa. In many homes, mothers fulfill the role of primary caregiver, bearing the weight of responsibility to raise and nurture their children well. This responsibility holds great power and potential, but when unsupported, it often becomes disempowering. Motherhood was never meant to be journeyed in isolation. Mothers rely on deep-rooted community and societal connections to access the support, services and care they need to thrive. A mother who thrives is empowered to help her family do the same.

As I reflect on what I’ve learnt observing and interacting with three cohorts of Mamandla Fellows, there are three examples of power at the forefront of my mind:

The power of time

When we started planning for Cohort 1, we spent so much time deliberating the programme the Fellows would follow. How much knowledge could be imparted each weekend we gathered? What were the fundamental skills we needed to transfer in order to see our model as a success? It took only a few hours in-person to see the magic of Mamandla firsthand. The fellows needed time. Time away from heavy family responsibilities. Time for uninterrupted conversations, time for uninterrupted sleep. Time for brainstorming and laughter and tears around the firepit late into the night. Mothers have a scarcity of time for themselves. When given it, they know how to use it well.

The power of connection

Half-way through the first journey, the Covid pandemic hit, shaking up so many of our calculated plans. We had to cancel our last immersion and move to virtual conversations and it was disappointing for everyone. And yet, connections didn’t fizzle away. We bore witness to fellows encouraging each other, supporting work on the ground, skills and resource sharing, and being intentional to stay connected. Tragically, we lost a much-loved fellow, Gillian Bird, in 2020 and experienced the deep connection of grief too. Cross-country connections are the anchor of our Fellowship. They represent the power of networking, the power of friendship and the power of belonging for our Mamandla community.

The power of common purpose

Mamandla Fellows apply to join this fellowship because they believe mothers deserve better. They also believe that mothers have a powerful role to play in driving the change they want to see. The power of common purpose is an indomitable force. Fellows are community leaders and activists, stepping into the power of collective knowledge, deeply-held motherhood wisdoms, traditions and a desire for social progress now!

“Nothing about us without us” encapsulates the power of Mamandla so well.

This publication showcases stories of our 2022/2023 Mamandla Fellowship cohort. You will also see updates from our engaged and growing alumni. The Mamandla journey doesn’t end, it just evolves and expands. We are so proud of this impressive community of leaders. Leadership and Activism doesn’t have to take on one particular style. Mamandla Fellows demonstrate powerful leadership and civic duty in so many different ways. Being vulnerable, making a brave life choice, holding space for other mothers, sacrificing your personal comforts for something bigger than yourself is leadership in action. Reading these stories has made me incredibly proud and inspired to do more and show up better. May the spirit of the Mamandla Fellowship move you as you read this too.

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Introducing Mamandla

People do not survive racism, xenophobia, gender discrimination, and poverty without developing extraordinary skills, systems, and practices of support. And in doing so, they carve a path for everyone else.

When one is pregnant, and literally carrying this new role in your individual being, it is easy to forget that you are one of millions and millions of people around the world walking this same sacred, steady path. Once the baby arrives, you may - at first - continue along this seemingly solitary path. If you’re fortunate, you may slowly begin to emerge into a new community filled with others on this path. Together, you will cry, laugh, trade jokes and information about the texture and frequency of infants’ poo, swap memes, and baby food recipes, and carry each other over the hardest patches of this path.

For me, this completely unexpected and inevitable community of other mothers was one of the sweetest, most valuable gifts early motherhood brought me. Motherhood instructed me on what it means to be part

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of community - to give and hold others, and more critically, to allow others to give to and hold me.

Embrace is an exercise in harnessing the game-changing strength of this community-in-practice to improve the social, economic, political contexts in which mothers mother. Mamandla is the central part of this social experiment. It is based in Embrace’s core belief that lasting positive change can and should be driven by the lived experiences of the individuals at whom change initiatives are directed. If we want to improve the lives and experiences of mothers in South Africa, we must allow these mothers to lead the charge.

And so, we introduce Mamandla - a platform uniquely designed to bring together and nurture communities of practice and communities in practice centered on mothers and the motherhood experience.

In this first edition of our yearbook, you will meet a group of women connected by and to the common aim of building and mobilising communities of support for mothers across the country. You will meet women who have taken the difficult steps into single motherhood, and who are drawing on their experiences to bring other single mothers into spaces of support, where they can challenge and escape the stigma that often

forces them into isolation. You will meet women whose career-paths were forever changed when they became mothers, and witness how they have resisted the so-called ‘mommy gap’ by building social enterprises, businesses and media platforms by mothers, for mothers. You will learn that mothers are made and moulded by their communities, not by pregnancy and birth alone.

And accordingly, you will hear from what we call ‘social’ mothers, who care for mothers so they can care for their children.

You won’t hear about singular ways to parent. You won’t be exposed to feeding, discipline, diapering doctrines. But you will have a front row seat to what a community in action can achieve when it brings together like-minded and energetic people, and allows them to build a network focused on an often-ignored but powerfully positioned social grouping.

At our annual Power Trip (™), I like to screen a years-old TED Talk (I know, I know) delivered by writer and activist Mia Birdsong. In it, she talks about the need for incubators and venture funds and fellowships for overlooked people who are finding ways to tackle some of the most pervasive social problems caused by inequality and poverty. Instead of designing interventions

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aimed at and for people ‘on the ground’, she argues, we need more spaces that allow people to build from their experiences. This is what Mamandla is about: making time, space and place to bring women who are embedded in motherhood communities together so they can talk about, and plan for the work of making South Africa the best place in which to mother.

We know from our work with mothers in South Africa that they are doers: they will make a plan, keep their head down and forge ahead, even if it means ignoring their own needs and aspirations. Mamandla is a community built from the deep desire to give those dedicated to collective action for mothers a break from the doing, and time to work together on systemic change for their own communities.

Ross Gay writes about the concept of rhizomatic care. The rhizome is a social node that is of interconnected and inter dependent nature. Think of a knot tied to a lattice of other knots. To unravel one, you must unravel all of them. If you tug to strengthen one, you tighten all. Gay writes:

Despite every single lie to the contrary, despite every single action born of that lie—we are in the midst of rhizomatic care that extends in every direction, spatially, temporally, spiritually, you name it. It’s

certainly not the only thing we’re in the midst of, but it’s the truest thing. By far.

What a wonderful way in which to see one another. I am tied to you. If you’re healthy, I will be healthy. Mamandla is, for us, a window into what that could look like, and what infrastructure we need to make rhizomatic care work, and to keep it alive. It is a space where mothers and their supporters model communities of care, and build them outwards, into broader society.

We hope you see your own patterns of care and communities in these pages. And, if you think you might belong here, we hope you’ll consider joining Mamandla.

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For me, the Mamandla Fellowship represents movement building achieved through nurturing and building three intersecting communities: a community of care, a community of learning, and a community of action.

The community of care is the foundation of the Fellowship. Mamandla Fellows experience being cared for and in turn care for others. Mamandla Fellows are chosen because they care. And they listen – and learn to listen – to one another. This creates an environment of trust and openness, which encourages risk-taking, sharing and vulnerability. It is out of these caring values and behaviours that the Fellows are able to embark on a journey of learning. They are able to have difficult conversations with each other, talk about issues that are not easily spoken about and learn from each other’s experiences. Out of this, they find the courage to take action – and can return to the circle of care to support them when they encounter the inevitable challenges and setbacks that come from trying to make change in the interests of mothers in South Africa.

A decade of leveraging relationships of influence in the interests of mothers

The power of this model lies in its rootedness in the experiences of mothers and mother-supporters. And a recognition that it takes more than skills and techniques and methods to lead on action and change. From the outset, Embrace has championed issues in the field of maternal and child health and well being that many would prefer to avoid or that rarely have a light shone on them. Obstetric violence is one such issue, maternal hunger another. The burden of care carried by mothers during – and post-Covid yet another. How, as a small but passionate team, do you start to turn the tide on deeply entrenched views of women (and mothers) and the institutional behaviours that accompany them?

You know that your power lies in relationships – of influence, of support, and of trust – and you look for every opportunity to build them.

This is what Embrace has spent the last 10 years doing, in ever-expanding circles of mothers and mother-supporters across the country. Always starting from the experiences of mothers, always listening and valuing what they have to say, and always recognising the reciprocity in these relationships. The Mamandla Fellowship is deeply rooted in these values and principles and beliefs, and each Fellow is in turn connected to one another through them.

Many times, I heard Mamandla Fellows speaking about a burden, an issue, a challenge collectively shared and collectively held, about journeys taken together to arrive at a place of new and different understanding. Many of these journeys – of learning, of action, of leading on change – have not been easy but they have been made more possible because of the courage that comes when you know you aren’t alone.

This is a model that has resonance with, and inspires, our own fellowship, which seeks to nurture and support young leaders and innovators in civil society organisations. Our work surely, as designers and facilitators of Fellowships, is to keep getting better at building this kind of solidarity, of growing connected and ever-expanding communities of care, learning, and action?

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About Carol-Ann Foulis

Carol-Ann Foulis is an independent organisational development consultant. She consults to a range of NGOs around issues of strategy, programme development, fundraising, leadership transition and organisational strengthening. Prior to this, she worked at the DG Murray Trust in various programme leadership roles, and left the organisation as Innovation Director of the strategy to ‘Nurture an Innovative and Inclusive Society’. Carol-Ann has a Master’s Degree in Development Studies. She sits on the board of the Western Cape Liquor Authority (WCLA). Carol-Ann is a guest facilitator for the Mamandla Fellowship

Not just somebody’s mother

Seven years into her journey as a mother, philanthropist and volunteer counsellor Qaanita Rossier is making significant strides towards empowering other mothers in South Africa.

Motherhood was a binding agent for mom of two Qaanita Rossier. Having struggled postpartum, especially with breastfeeding and feelings of loneliness and isolation, she became heightened to the needs of other new mothers. Early on in her mothering journey, this included offering to wet nurse for an acquaintance when her own baby was just four months old.

A friend of a friend, who had had a breast reduction years before, opened up to Qaanita about not being able to breastfeed, as much as she yearned to. As a fellow devoted Muslim, Qaanita understood what this meant for the acquaintance. Breastfeeding is strongly recommended in the Muslim community, and women of faith are urged to pursue it for their baby’s benefit.

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Moved by her friend’s story, Qaanita offered to wet nurse the baby and, as per Islamic tradition, he became her milk son. Qaanita was intentional about this work, which she saw as a labour of love

No stranger to philanthropy

Becoming a milk mother was not Qaanita’s first foray into advocacy work. Having just experienced the identity shift herself, she was leaning in to her natural feelings of empathy and understanding for all new mothers.

“When you become a mother, you suddenly see yourself in other mothers. Whether they are richer or poorer than you, or come from different circumstances, it’s like you’re all the same person and your desire to keep your child alive and healthy is universal. Those things still exist no matter where you come from,” she says.

Qaanita is no stranger to philanthropy, as one of a group of women who started the Friends in Giving Network (FIG) in 2010. FIG is a nonprofit organisation that runs social outreach projects in underserved communities.

However, it was five years into running FIG that Qaanita became a mother. And

for a fellow mother. She was careful not to bond with the child in the months that followed, cognisant of the mother’s feelings and aware of her role as a provider.

while she describes her initiation into matrescence as beautiful and well-supported, it was not without its dark moments. This triggered a worldview change in Qaanita that got her thinking about what new motherhood might look like for under-resourced mothers with little to no support.

“I am an extremely privileged person with an established support system, food in my fridge and a roof over my head, and even I struggled as a new mother. I gave birth in a private hospital, I had access to a lactation consultant and antenatal classes, and even I struggled with my mental health.

“After becoming a mother, I couldn’t see the child who suffers abandonment and neglect without also seeing a mother who has been severely abandoned and neglected by the socioeconomic systems in South Africa,” she says.

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Relief work has an expiry date

Now a mother of two small boys, Qaanita was seven years into her motherhood journey when her passion for working with mothers came to a head. At the same time that she applied for Embrace’s Mamandla Fellowship, Qaanita started volunteering at The Counselling Hub and, more recently, with the South African Depression and Anxiety Group (Sadag).

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“I started defining and redefining what I wanted to do with my life and it all started happening at once. My motherhood advocacy took off at the same time as my volunteer counselling, which prompted me to go back and study. So, by the end of the year, I’ll be a registered counsellor with the HPCSA,” she says.

Qaanita felt fulfilled with the meaningful and purpose-driven work she was doing at The Counselling Hub. This gave her the motivation she needed to further her studies after seven years at a desk job. Looking back, the mother of two acknowledges that she’d been struggling with feelings of identity loss with respect to her career. She had dedicated much of the last seven years raising her two small boys while working in human resources at her family’s welding company. And while she is grateful for the flexibility and privilege that her job afforded her, allowing her to be present for her children, she did not feel fulfilled in her work.

“I was feeling super low when I applied for the fellowship and I kept thinking, ‘What have I amounted to these last seven years?’ I didn’t think I was going to get in. It felt impossible. What did I have? What could I contribute?”

believes her work with Mamandla has given her a better idea of how to accomplish that.

Once she is a registered counsellor, Qaanita’s focus will be on perinatal mental health, to be the person she needed when she was struggling with her mental health after becoming a mother.

“Registered counsellors are kind of the middle ground for people who can’t get to psychologists, either because the waiting list is so long, or because the clinic focuses on more severe psychological disorders and serious mental health issues. As a result, mothers who are giving birth are overlooked in these contexts,” Qaanita explains.

“I’m hoping to focus on that constituency of moms who are desperate just to talk to someone and figure out what they’re going through.”

Qaanita says she also wants to develop FIG as an organisation that offers solutions beyond relief work.

At the same time, Qaanita realised that she wanted to add an element of sustainability to her work with FIG. She

“Relief work has an expiry date. When you keep pumping food and resources into a community and you’re not building on the resources that they have, like upskilling mothers, or making sure that they’re well enough to thrive in their communities, or be the best versions of

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themselves, then we’re going to continue having safe houses that are bursting at the seams.”

Qaanita adds that being a Mamandla fellow has helped her connect her journeys and goals as a philanthropist and budding counsellor. While being a fellow expanded her network, it also brought her one step closer to, what she believes is, her life’s calling.

“It’s all about making a mother well and making her whole. She can go out and she can do so much, and I needed to realise that for myself as well. I know I can go out and do so much, but I needed to be whole. And that was very much a part of what Mamandla has done for me. It’s helped me to see myself again, and to see my own worth. I needed to remind myself that I am not just somebody’s mother.

“Mothers are not just here to ensure the wellness of their children. Although that is still your priority, you actually have so much more to give. There is so much more to you, and I think that was a massive realisation for me,” she concludes.

Qaani T a r ossi E r
“When you become a mother, you suddenly see yourself in other mothers”

Finding myself in motherhood

Despite her ambitions to advocate for people as a lawyer, becoming a mother is what ultimately drew Palesa closer to her purpose. This includes not only her role as a homemaker and mom of two, but also her identity as an entrepreneur and motherhood advocate.

Many moms who start a business after having a baby are inspired by something they lacked in the early days of motherhood. Palesa Mphambani is no exception.

Overwhelmed by new motherhood and struggling with undiagnosed postpartum depression (PPD), Palesa turned to babywearing to deal with her firstborn’s four-month sleep regression.

Knowing that many buckled baby carriers could not be used for babies under a year, Palesa needed a solution – something suitable for a newborn that would free her hands while giving her baby the closeness she craved. The new mother ordered a baby wrap off a local website and saw positive results immediately.

Three years later, Palesa launched her own baby wrap business, Sondela Baby Wraps, which is focused

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on strengthening the maternal bond between a mother and her baby. This was a dream that Palesa had manifested when she was still in the throes of postpartum life.

“A couple of months ago I picked up a diary from 2018, which I had totally forgotten about. On the first page – 17 April 2018 – I wrote that I wanted to start a babywearing business. I wrote down the measurements, what type of

fabric I would need, and where I would get the fabric….”

Three years, one global pandemic and a second baby later, Palesa took the plunge and pursued Sondela Baby Wraps fulltime in 2021. The growing business is testament to what helped get the new mother through some of her toughest days in the first year since giving birth.

Undiagnosed postpartum depression

Babywearing gave Palesa some muchneeded respite from the physical labour of the first 1000 days postpartum. But still, the new mother continued to struggle with her mental health, which bled into her second pregnancy.

“I was going through PPD and I didn’t know it. I was sleep deprived and depleted and I just thought I was feeling sad. My baby would cry and I would cry with her. I was alone, depressed and helpless and I didn’t know what I was doing. I also felt a lot of guilt, and like I wasn’t good enough. I always thought I

could do more or do things better,” she admits.

Palesa gave birth to her second child in the thick of the first hard lockdown during the Covid-19 pandemic. Still, she assumed things would be better this time round, because she was no longer a first-time mom.

“I thought I would be more confident because I knew things now, and I was well equipped, but that wasn’t the case,” she says.

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“I re-evaluated what advocacy looks like and realised how it can also be gentle, quiet and subtle but still very powerful”

Palesa’s second birth – an attempt at a vaginal birth after Caesarean-section, or VBAC – was particularly traumatic. After labouring for days and preparing her mind and body for the vaginal delivery she had dreamed of, she was not dilating and her baby was in distress.

Palesa recalls being wheeled into theatre and thinking that her contracting body was failing her:

“That was the most heart-breaking part for me. My body felt like it was doing what it needed to, but I would still be cut open. Why would I be going through the natural delivery process without anything coming to fruition?”

Now in recovery for PPD, Palesa believes she was clouded by her desire to birth naturally, and that she attached her worth as a woman to the experience of a vaginal delivery, instead of just surrendering to the process.

“Depression feels like a thread that’s about to snap or break apart. It feels like a heavy head. Things like making food, getting out of bed, going out, laughing, taking a shower… It all felt too hard.”

Palesa is still battling with depression, but is actively going to therapy to work on her mental health.

“It’s difficult. I feel like I’m looking at myself through a window and I can see

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“I was going through postpartum depression and I didn’t know it”

the life that I want to live, but I’m stuck on the other side of the window. I feel like I’m battling to connect the pieces of where I am or where I’m supposed to be, like I’m lost somewhere in time and replaying the life I’m meant to live.”

The mom of two adds that being depressed with children makes recovery that much harder.

“Children want you to be present, conversational and engaged. But when you’re depressed you don’t want to do these things. You don’t want to laugh or explain things but you have to, because you’re a mother.”

Lofty ambitions: #goals

Despite her struggles with mental health, Palesa is determined and ambitious. In addition to her law degree from the University of the Witwatersrand, the Mamandla fellow completed a certificate in public relations from the University of Cape Town during the 2020 lockdown, while pregnant and newly postpartum.

With plans to expand her product offering at Sondela, Palesa dreams of one day opening a mother-and-baby play studio to explore her passion for early childhood development. She’s also considering doula training and opening a pregnancy clinic with her mother, who is a qualified midwife.

“I would conduct the antenatal training and offer antenatal support, while my mom offers midwifery services. I’ve also written a book about breastfeeding, which I hope I’ll be able to publish soon. I’ve got big plans!” she laughs.

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But Palesa recognises that she cannot realise all of her dreams and passion projects at the same time, and is trying to surrender by taking things one day at a time.

“Part of me is bursting with colour and ideas, wanting to do everything, but I’ve

Redefining advocacy

Recognising that most of the decisions affecting mothers are made by men, and that women’s voices are stifled, Palesa applied to be a Mamandla fellow to help amplify mothers and their voices in South Africa.

“Something I lacked in new motherhood was community. I was the only mom in my friend group and I missed being in communion with other mothers. So, what attracted me to Mamandla is having that solidarity with like-minded women, and trying to advocate for mothers and our rights in South Africa.”

Palesa adds that her Mamandla journey has helped her realise that advocacy comes in many shapes and sizes. It can be bold, like changing legislation, or it can be as simple as supporting a mother in your community and lending an ear.

been too hard on myself. I’m trying to do it all, but I can’t. Motherhood comes with an overwhelming sense of humbleness. You can’t do it all. I’m not superhuman, I’m just me, and that realisation has knocked me off my feet,” she says.

“I re-evaluated what advocacy looks like and realised how it can also be gentle, quiet and subtle but still very powerful.

Yes, I studied law and I can be a legal advocate and fight in court. But I’m starting to feel that maybe my need to advocate for people looks different to what I thought it would. I found myself in motherhood, and I found a way to fight for the things that are now really close to my heart.”

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